Introduction:Drug induced oral erythema multiforme a rare clinical entity which involves only the lips and oral mucosa without skin involvement. These lesions are difficult in diagnosing with other oral ulcerative lesions with similar clinical manifestations.Patient concerns:This article presents 2 case reports of Oral erythema multiforme in which drugs were the precipitating factor. Its etiopathogenesis, differential diagnosis and treatment modalities of the disease is discussed.Diagnosis:Based on patient's complaints, drug history and clinical appearance, provisional diagnosis of drug induced erythema multiforme was considered.Intervention:For case 1, patient was instructed to discontinue usage of drug and prescribed systemic steroid (Prednisolone 10 mg/d) for a week along with germicidal drugs to prevent secondary infection. Medication was tapered to 5 mg/d after first week.For case 2, patient was instructed to discontinue the drug and systemic steroid prednisolone 20 mg /d for 1 week with tapering dose of 10 mg/d for the second week was administered.Outcome:For case 1 and case 2 healing of the lesions were evident on third week of follow up.Conclusion:Medications should be taken under medical supervision. Over the counter drugs might lead to allergic reactions like drug induced oral erythema multiforme, which is a rare variant and needs to be differentiate from other oral ulcerative lesion for prompt management and follow-up.
CITATION STYLE
Asif, S. M., Shamsudeen, S. M., Assiri, K. I., Muburak, H. M. A., Kaleem, S. M., Khan, A. A., & Shariff, M. (2021). Drug induced oral erythema multiforme: Case report. Medicine (United States), 100(17), E22387. https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000022387
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.